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Wednesday, August 5, 2020

AMD Reaches Highest Overall x86 Chip Market Share Since 2013 - Tom's Hardware

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(Image credit: AMD)

AMD's Cinderella story continued today with a report from Mercury Research, one of the chip industry's premier market analyst firms, that indicates AMD had reached 18.3% of the overall x86 share and 19.7% of the client market. That's the company's highest share since the fourth quarter of 2013 and the first quarter of 2012, respectively. The company also broke its all-time record for notebook market share penetration. We have the full breakdown below, including the company's gains in the desktop, notebook/mobile, and server segments.

The news comes on the back of AMD's stellar Q2 2020 earnings report, along with Intel's recent announcement that its 7nm process will be late to market, both of which combined to propel AMD to record stock valuations over the last week. Today AMD closed just shy of a $100 billion market cap, another record, as investors bought into the optimism – particularly around the company's share gains in the server market. 

Here are the hard numbers from Mercury Research on the current state of play in the x86 semiconductor market.

AMD vs. Intel Desktop Market Unit Share Q2 2020 

2Q20 1Q20 4Q19 3Q19 2Q19 1Q2019 4Q18 3Q18 2Q18 1Q18 4Q17 3Q17 2Q17 1Q17 4Q16 3Q16
AMD Desktop Unit Share 19.2% 18.6% 18.3% 18% 17.1% 17.1% 15.8% 13% 12.3% 12.2% 12.0% 10.9% 11.1% 11.4% 9.9% 9.1%
Quarter over Quarter (QoQ) pp +0.6 +0.3 +0.3 +0.9 Flat +1.3 +2.8 +0.7 +0.1 +0.2 +1.1 -0.2 -0.3 +1.5 +0.8
Year over Year (YoY) pp +2.1 +1.5 +2.4 +5 +4.8 +4.9 +3.8 +2.1 +1.2 +0.8 +2.1 +1.8

AMD took its highest desktop PC processor share since Q1 2014 with 19.2%, a gain of 0.6 percentage points over the prior quarter, and 2.1 points YoY (excludes IoT). This marks AMD's 10th consecutive quarter of growth in the desktop PC market.

Intel's 2Q earnings report showed signs of weakness in its desktop processor sales, with desktop platform volumes dropping by 14% compared to both the prior quarter and year. For 2020 as a whole, Intel's desktop platform revenue is down 9%, or $607 million compared to the same point in 2019.

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(Image credit: Intel)
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(Image credit: Intel)

Meanwhile, AMD cited slightly reduced desktop processor sales compared to its prior quarter, even as its client segment boomed with the highest revenue of the last 12 years. Much of that gain came from the notebook segment we'll cover below. However, because AMD lumps consumer processors and GPUs into the same revenue segment, it was impossible to determine if its increased revenue came at the expense of Intel. The share numbers indicate that even though we can probably chalk some of Intel's loss up to the impact of the coronavirus, AMD is creating plenty of pressure in the desktop PC market.

AMD vs. Intel Notebook / Mobile Unit Share Q2 2020

2Q20 1Q20 Q419 3Q19 2Q19 1Q2019 4Q18 3Q18 2Q18
AMD Mobile Unit Share 19.9% 17.1% 16.2% 14.7% 14.1% 13.1% 12.2% 10.9% 8.8%
Quarter over Quarter / Year over Year (pp) +2.9 / +5.8 +0.9 / +3.2 +1.5 / +4.0 +0.7 / +3.8 +1.0 / +5.3 +0.9 / ?

AMD's 19.9% of notebook processor share is the company's highest percentage of this lucrative segment in its history, marking the 12th consecutive quarter of growth for AMD in the notebook segment.

Notebooks comprise roughly 65% of the consumer CPU market and have been a long, slow haul for AMD. It's clear that AMD's targeted efforts have borne fruit with a 2.9 point gain over the prior quarter and a 5.8 point gain over the prior year. AMD announced during its earnings report that it had notched a 12-year high in consumer processor sales as its client computing group grew by 45%, and much of that gain came from Ryzen 4000 notebook processor sales. AMD's mobile processor sales doubled YoY, and another 30+ models will join the 50+ notebooks on the market by the end of the year. That means AMD has a solid runway for more growth.

The notebook market exploded in the wake of the pandemic as a new paradigm of working from home took hold, so Intel also increased its sales by 9%. However, though the pie grew larger for both companies, AMD's slice is obviously growing faster.

AMD made the wise decision to push into the lower rungs of the notebook market while Intel grappled with shortages last year, so Intel has felt the most share loss in cheaper, low-margin processors. Intel has invested heavily in increasing its production capacity, and CFO George Davis remarked during the company's earnings call that "We expect our share to improve throughout the remainder of the year as we begin to recover unit share in notebooks utilizing our smaller core products which we have not been able to fully serve given the strength of demand for our large core products."

That means we'll see stiff competition for the remainder of the year, especially as Intel is on the cusp of releasing its 10nm Tiger Lake CPUs.  

AMD vs. Intel Server Unit Market Share Q2 2020

AMD bases its server share projections on IDC's forecasts but only accounts for the single- and dual-socket market, which eliminates four-socket (and beyond) servers, networking infrastructure and Xeon D's (edge). As such, Mercury's numbers differ from the numbers cited by AMD, which predict a higher market share. Here is AMD's comment on the matter: "Mercury Research captures all x86 server class processors in their server unit estimate, regardless of device (server, network or storage), whereas the estimated 1P [single-socket] and 2P [two-socket] TAM [Total Addressable Market] provided by IDC only includes traditional servers."

2Q20 1Q20 4Q19 3Q19 2Q19 1Q2019 4Q18 3Q18 2Q18 4Q17
AMD Server Unit Share 5.8% 5.1% 4.5% 4.3% 3.4% 2.9% 3.2% 1.6% 1.4% 0.8%
Quarter over Quarter / Year over Year (pp) +0.7 / +2.4 +0.6 / 2.2 +0.2 / +1.4 +0.9 / +2.7 +0.5 / +2.0 -0.3 / - +1.6 / 2.4 +0.2 / -

According to the Mercury Research analysis, AMD now holds 5.8% of the total server share. That's an increase of 0.7 points over the prior quarter, and 2.4 points over the prior year. AMD has told us that it will share IDC's report soon, and we expect it will be closer to AMD CEO Lisa Su's projection that the company had finally reached its oft-quoted goal of a double-digit percentage of the server market. AMD also announced that it had doubled its EPYC server chip sales during the last quarter.

AMD's data center EPYC sales set a quarterly record and doubled year-over-year as the Enterprise, Embedded and Semi-Custom group delivered $565 million in revenue. For comparison, Intel's data center group recorded $7.1 billion last quarter, which highlights why investors are so optimistic about AMD's gains in the server market, especially in light of Intel's looming process delays.

Su said AMD has reached its goal, but didn't set a new market share goal. Su said at a recent investor event that the company wouldn't project server CPU sales based on market share in the future, instead focusing on revenue targets: "[...] we're going to transition from share targets to more of a percentage of AMD revenue because that will give you a better idea of the progression. [...]So the server business will continue to be very strategic. I probably won't give you another share target. But what we did say, though, and it gives you an idea of what we think the size of the business can be, when we did our Financial Analyst Day a couple of months ago, we said we saw the server – or the data center business for us, being upwards of 30% of overall AMD."

During the company's earnings call, Su noted that EPYC comprised 20% of the company's revenue, or roughly $386 million, so it's clear the company has plans for significantly more uptake in the future. She predicted accelerating uptake of the EPYC data center CPUs in the back half of the year, too.

Intel still holds 94.2% of the market and its recent Xeon price cuts make it clear that the company is willing to sacrifice margins to remain competitive. In fact, the company's margins dropped from its historic ~60% range to 53.3% last quarter (the lowest since 2009). Intel also notched strong server revenue of its own last quarter (up 43% YoY) due to pandemic-spurred uptake of server gear. 

AMD has its EPYC Milan chips coming this year, while Intel has its 10nm Ice Lake Xeons in the hopper, so the rest of the year should be incredibly competitive as AMD works to improve its standing.

AMD vs. Intel Total Market Share Q2 2020

2Q20 1Q20 4Q19 3Q19 2Q19 4Q18 3Q18
AMD Client 19.7% 17.5% 17.0% 15.8% 15% 13.5% 11.6%
Client PP Change QoQ / YoY +2.2 / +4.7 -0.5% / ? +1.1 / +3.5 +0.8 / +4.2 ? ? -
AMD Overall x86 18.3% 14.8% 15.5% 14.6% 13.9% 12.3% 10.6%
Overall PP Change QoQ / YoY +3.5 / +1.2 (+3.7?) -0.7 / ? +0.9 / +3.2 +0.7 / +4 ? ? -

Here we have the final word on the matter, at least for now. AMD has taken 18.3% of the overall x86 share - the highest since the fourth quarter of 2013. The company also has taken its highest share of the client x86 market since the first quarter of 2012 at 19.7%. 

We've reached out for more clarity on a few points, and will update as necessary.  

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August 05, 2020 at 12:26PM
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AMD Reaches Highest Overall x86 Chip Market Share Since 2013 - Tom's Hardware

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